"Aerial photography was quite an art in 1906. Airplanes could barely get
off the ground then, and lighter-than-air ships were expensive and cumbersome.
An enterprising midwesterner, George Lawrence, devised and patented this
ingenious system of kites and wires, right, that carried a 46-pound panoramic
camera 800 feet into the air. It was with this arrangement that these three
pictures weretaken. Lawrence and his local associate, Harry Myers, played out
half a mile of line before the camera was at the proper altitude. When they
were ready to shoot, they checked with binoculars to make sure the lens was
lined up, and then tripped the shutter with an electrical impulse generated by
an old style telephone magneto. A device within the camera then swept across a
90-degree arc to expose the image to a 22 by 55 inch negative (Oakland Tribune)"

"This sweeping panorama, like the two on the opposite page, taken from a
camera hoisted aloft by a string of kites. The Mint, center, is at the corner
of Mission and Fifth streets. City Hall is at the far left."

"Opposite view looking over Nob Hill toward business district, South of
the Slot, and the distant Mission. Fairmont Hotel, center, dwarfs the Call
Building. City Hall and Ferry Building are easy to spot. (Panoramas courtesy of
Harry Myers)."

"Three years after the pictures above were taken, a great part of the
downtown section had been completely rebuilt. View here was shifted slightly to
the east. Goat Island, far left. Mason Street cuts across right corner."